Saturday, April 27, 2024

Warning: Some images may be considered NSFW in some midwestern US states and especially in deep south US states. No buildings or mannequins or other bloggers' feelings were harmed in the presentation of these random images from Eeyore's Birthday Party at Pease Park in Austin, Texas. Check back later for gear notes.

 


Added: Gear Notes. All images taken using a Leica M240 camera set to uncompressed DNG. Two lenses utilized. The Carl Zeiss 50mm f2.0 and the Voigtlander VM 75mm f1.9. Processed in Lightroom Classic. Minimal processing beyond exposure and contrast.

Eeyore's Birthday Party has evolved from a small gathering of English majors from UT to a counter culture gathering of pot heads and hippies to, finally, a family friendly, PG rated fund raiser for mainstream Austin non-profits. It's lost its cool edge but is now more accessible to more people and it maintains an Austin vibe. The pot smoke was more subdued this year. The public nudity much more restrained, the family friendly stuff made much more pervasive. Kind of kills the interest for some photographers but I'm a believer in inclusion so there is that. 

I walked through and ran into Jerry Sullivan who, until recently, was the owner and operator of Precision Camera. He was sporting an M series Leica and some fun lenses. He had, in tow, Pete Holland who founded Holland Photo Lab many years ago. He retired about ten years back and he was making fun images today with a Ricoh GR111x camera. I ran into my friend from lunch the day before and he was sporting a new camera which shall, for the immediate future, remain ambiguous. 

I walked down a mile from my car and carried with me a Leica M240 and a couple of lenses. It all worked well. 

Since it is my blog I put in photographs that I liked. When I came home and got cleaned up B. and I went to our favorite neighborhood restaurant. It's closing for good on Tuesday. Some investor from California is raising the rent on the space the restaurant has occupied for decades by an additional 300%. Haven't they heard that Austin is imploding? Don't they want to head back home and continue messing stuff up in their own back yard?

In other notes, Austin restaurant, Jeffrey's, sold a bottle of wine a couple of weeks ago for the princely sum of $60,000. The gratuity on the bottle service was a whopping $14,000. Apparently Austin isn't out of the running for the most Ostentatious City in the Country just yet....

I like big events in the park that DON'T have: VIP tents. VIP shuttles. VIP bars. VIP early entry, etc. Eeyore's raises money for non-profits. For charities. Nobody gets rich from Eeyore's. Looking at you, trough feeders at ACL and SXSW.....

Just normal, mostly well adjusted people, collectively enjoying an afternoon in a beautiful park. With tens of thousands of other like-minded people. Nice. No valet parking. No heliports. 

And kids. Lots and lots of kids. Always looking to the future. 

Hope you like the photos. 
















































Random Shots from Eeyore's Birthday Party 2024. Part One. Note: These contain no harmful mannequin photos or photos of skyscapers. I guess they are safe for the sensitive viewers.

 


I was all ready to take a couple of Leica SL cameras and a couple of Sigma lenses with me to Eeyore's Birthday Party at Pease Park in Austin, Texas when it dawned on me that the older, Leica M240 would offer me more friction of use which might result in more interesting images. Especially since the friction immerses me more in the process and the visualization of photographs. I ended up taking one M240 camera, a 50mm f2.0 Zeiss lens and a 75mm f1.9 Voitlander VM lens instead. The combo was slower to use and required that I pay more attention. And for that I am thankful. 



Loving the bucket hats that match the shirts. Well done gentlemen!!!
Of course, I was wearing green bucket hat which in some universe might 
have matched my olive green short pants...

Mom's gotta mom when kids take a spill. 





Loving this image of the young drummer giving a side eye to someone. 
Grateful to have been alert to the action. And the camera worked its own magic.




Bubble mania. 








What kind of shoes does a four time Olympic swimmer wear to Eeyore's?
These. The ones right above...



A bit cheeky. Yes?
















A running take off of Sandy's Hamburger restaurant on Barton Springs Rd. 
Go there for the burgers but stay for the chocolate dipped, soft serve, ice cream cones. 
delicious and a core part of Austin...

Lenses that sometimes fly under the radar. And...Eeyore's Birthday Party.

 

I had lunch yesterday with an old friend. Well, he's not old, really but he's been a friend for a long time. Since we are both photographers we quickly moved the conversation away from politics, religion and whether or not skyscrapers were a valid photo target to less controversial and fraught subjects and settled in to discussing lenses. Yes, I know, if we were "real" artists we would have discussed some ingenious application of the color, French blue, into our work. Then we might have touched on something to do with combining our visions with discourse about hermeneutical comparisons of the seen and the unseen. But it's rare that burgers and fries engender such lofty discussions. We stuck to lenses. 

My friend is in the middle of expanding into a new camera system and asked my opinion, a few days earlier, about the Sigma i-Series lenses. He asked if I would bring a sample or two along with me to our scheduled lunch so he could get a handle on how they handle. A request I could easily handle...

I wanted to present a handful of lenses so I packed a small bag with the 24mm f3.5, the 35mm f2.0, the mystical and most often overlooked 45mm f2.8 and the small but powerful 90mm f2.8. I rarely hear about the 90mm f2.8 but it is one of my favorite lenses of all. It's small and light, optically very competitive and it's inexpensive. Especially among lenses in the Leica world.

The 90mm lens was fresh in my mind because it was the lens I used on my job the day before. I photographed two attorney in office environments and the 90mm focal length was perfect for the combination of good "drawing" for mid-torso portrait compositions --- meaning it didn't add foreshortening or too much obvious compression to the subject --- good optical performance when used with the SL2 (eye detect AF worked well with sharp irises and soft, diaphanous backgrounds) and quick focusing. In contrast to bigger lenses like the elephantine Leica 24/90mm or the Sigma 85mm f1.4 Art series lens the little 90mm makes working on a tripod casual fun. No drooping in a vertical orientation and no feeling of unbalance in any position. 

Many photographers overlook the 90mm f2.8 because they feel that they "need" the much faster aperture of the big, chubby, ungainly 85mm f1.4 lenses that everyone seems to offer. I guess f1.4 is nice to have if  you constantly shoot under profoundly dismal light but my decades of experience tell me that the times in which such a wide open aperture adds to a good portrait are minimal. Used at an 85mm's closest focusing distance with the aperture wide open is a novelty but eventually one gets bored by sharp irises and out of focus eyelashes and noses. Or sharp eyelashes and soft irises. In many past generation 85mm high speed lenses there was nearly always a trade off between speed and overall sharpness in photos. Yes, you could capture images at f1.4 but the corners paid for the speed with blurriness and artifacts. Even the centers of images were less than perfect. 

A 90mm f2.8 lens offers lens makers the opportunity to design something simpler and and easy to perfect. The Sigma lens, for instance, is sharp across the frame even when used wide open. And, at its widest aperture, and its closest focusing distance, there is just enough depth of field to do a good job with a portrait --- if you are careful to focus in the right spot. 

If you work as a commercial photographer doing portraits in studio and on location a small selection of the Sigma i-Series prime lenses, with the 90mm leading the charge, could be all a photographer needs for very sellable results. Combined with the small size and lower weight and you might find that upping your image quality while lowering your portage obligations is just what the art director ordered. 

I'm heading off to the big celebration in the park later this morning. It's the celebration called, Eeyore's Birthday Party. I've been going and photographing the characters there for decades. I'm just now packing. I've decided to bring two cameras and two lenses. Normally I'd bring just one camera and one lens but I'd like to use the 90mm for nice portraits and the 45mm for establishing shots. I've decided to put each lens on a dedicated SL body so I don't have to change them during the day. Last time I was at Eeyore's there was a lot of dust and we are also in full pollen season here in central Texas. And boy howdy! does that tree pollen do a helluva job sticking to exposed camera sensors....

I hope it doesn't rain. Or doesn't rain too much. I'd hate to see the event postponed. Now checking the website. 

Have a fun weekend. I've got a fun one all planned out.